In this episode, Cameron and Tony dive into the complex geopolitical and economic landscape of early 2026, examining China’s record trade surplus and the stalling impact of US tariffs on manufacturing. They explore how the AI boom has acted as a primary driver for US growth, potentially masking the drag created by trade restrictions. Closer to home, the duo discusses Australia’s manufacturing dependencies and the rising influx of Chinese EVs and renewable energy assets. The heart of the episode features deep dives into listener-driven data, comparing the QAV process against “buy and hold” strategies, and a “Pulled Pork” analysis of **Stanmore Resources (SMR)**. From managing red flags in stocks like **Fleetwood (FWD)** to the nuances of superannuation-approved ASX 300 lists, this episode balances high-level macro theory with the practical, rules-based discipline of value investing.
This week’s full episode is for QAV Club members only. The free episode is available below. Also check out our podcast archives link and our pages on Apple Podcasts or Spotify or watch clips on TikTok. Or visit our homepage to learn more about QAV and how it works as a value investing system that you can learn and apply to beat the market.
Transcription
[00:00:00]
Cameron: I better sit up. Welcome back to QAV Australia, Tony, episode 9 0 3. It is January 20th, 2026. Is it 26? It is 26.
Tony Kynaston: yep.
Cameron: Um, I’ve gotta tell you, Tony, um, I’m on the war path. I’m just, you know, because I didn’t get a Nobel Peace Prize. Tony, I am telling you what I am just as good. I’ll take it and I’ll take everything else you’ve got as well.
Tony Kynaston: Careful, careful. What you wish for.
Cameron: Oh, funny. Like, it’s, it’s, it’s so funny. It’s like being in a sitcom really, isn’t it? It’s like America, the sitcom. If it wasn’t so [00:01:00] dangerous to global affairs. But you gotta laugh. You got to laugh.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah, I mean, it just reminds me of my, my childhood when Ronald Reagan was in charge and we used to laugh at bedtime for Bonzo and you know, the chimp had his finger on the Adam bomb and all that. And it’s just going back to that same thing.
Cameron: Yeah. And you know, I mean, there’s a lot of crazy stuff going on, but in historical context, you know, compared to, I don’t know, Johnson and Nixon and Reagan, I always go, you know what? He’s not necessarily the worst president has ever been, and w And people go, oh, he’s the worst. I’m like, no, he’s not the worst.
And it will always get worse, you know? I think one thing that history’s taught us is it can always get worse, but I.
Tony Kynaston: Republicans, right. Biden was asleep.
Cameron: Yeah. Yeah, I agree with you. Biden was non-comp mentors [00:02:00] and the, and the Democrats were pushing him for another term. Yeah. Like Anyw, who,
Tony Kynaston: and I think actually that’s
Cameron: uh,
Tony Kynaston: that’s the template. If you are a power broker behind the scenes or wealthy person in America, find someone who’s non-comp mentors and put them in the White House.
Cameron: I think that’s what Reagan taught them, right?
Tony Kynaston: Yeah,
Cameron: Oh, we can just hire an actor to be president. How good is this? Why didn’t we think of this before?
Tony Kynaston: yeah.
Cameron: Well, moving off of the us, uh, and onto China, Tony, um, as we love, love saying on this show, uh, China’s economy is either completely crumbling and failing or. As we saw in the New York Times this week, it had just announced a record trade surplus as its exports, flood worlds markets.
China’s surplus reached $1.19 trillion, a 20% increase from 2024, according to data released by the country’s general [00:03:00] administration of customs. But there is little evidence in the data to support the idea. Oh, this is a different story. So that was the first story, um, in the New York Times. Um, now, I mean, record trade surplus doesn’t necessarily mean that their economy is going well on all measures, but what it does mean is they’re still selling a lot of stuff despite Trump’s tariffs, which was supposed to write the trade balance between America and China.
And we talked about how, you know, the, there were implications of that for the US economy. And there was another article in the financial, uh, not the financial review, the New York Times that I read this week. Um, with economists talking about the US economy and the, at one point they said there’s a little evidence in the data to support the idea that tariffs are conveying broad economic benefits.
US growth has been strong in recent months, but economists say that has been driven primarily by the boom and artificial [00:04:00] intelligence. The construction of vast data centers is boosting investment while soaring AI stocks and making Americans who invested in the stock market richer, encouraging more spending on goods and services.
New tax deductions that were signed into law last year are also encouraging investment, but manufacturing the sector that tariffs are designed to help. Appears to be struggling. Surveys show that manufacturing contracted for a 10th straight month in December and spending on new factories has slumped since the Biden administration, the United States has steadily she factory jobs in recent months.
Any gains in the country’s anemic job market last year were almost entirely from the healthcare sector. Smaller manufacturers in particular seem to be reeling from the higher costs of inputs like metal and machinery that have been hit by tariffs. Several economists said that the United States was growing not because of tariffs, but in spite of them.
Gita Gana, a Harvard economist and former [00:05:00] first deputy managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said that the AI boom had basically offset the drag from tariffs. So what do you make of all of that, Tony?
Tony Kynaston: Well, it answers the high level question, um, that I pose when the tariffs were reduced, which is, you know, it, it will on the US economy and 12 months on it hasn’t seemed to have done that. So that answers that question, but it’s. If you look at the manufacturing sector, it’s exactly the same experience Australia had when it had a high tariff economy. Um, particularly, well, my experience was with the textile economy, with, um, clothing manufacturers and shoe manufacturers and the like, as tariffs were unwound under the, um, success of governments and the eighties and nineties. Uh, but the, the thing is that if you are a, if you are a operator of a business in that area, though the [00:06:00] imports are being hurt by tariffs, you still want a slow drip to nowhere.
You still want a slow decline. It’s a slow death. It’s, it’s like being, it’s like being treated for cancer. It’s like the, the cure is gonna kill you more than the will in some respects, because, um, you still. People know that they can get a better product from overseas. And so sometimes they get around that.
Markets get around that either they import it from a country, like it goes via a third country, which doesn’t have the tariffs imposed on them. Or someone in Australia imports them cheaply somehow and gets around the tariffs and then sells them at markup prices and they make out like bandits or whatever. But the local manufacturers still don’t win because they’re selling a high cost product to people who are not gonna pay a high cost for it, or they reduce their spending in that area. And then if you’re the operator of that business, why would you invest any more in building new factories or expanding?
So it [00:07:00] just becomes a slow, a slow drip depth death for you until you know you are one of the last players and you’re the last player, and then you turn the lights out, and then the tariff get wound back. And it’s the same thing with manufacturing in the us If like, why would you invest to expand your facilities, your, um, factories or your foundries or whatever, that. The government could may change, or it may be in power forever, but, um, under both
Cameron: If it changes.
Tony Kynaston: But yeah, if it, if it changes or if it doesn’t, the person in charge could on the whim reduce the tariffs
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: then you’re stuffed, so you’re
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: government to, to keep propping you up.
Cameron: Mm-hmm.
Tony Kynaston: you are manufacturing something which people know they can get a better quality product cheaper from overseas.
And that’s where,
Cameron: Mm-hmm.
Tony Kynaston: that’s where the market will tend to gravitate under, under whatever circumstance it can to try and get that product into the hands of local consumers.
Cameron: Mm-hmm.
Tony Kynaston: invest and then you, if
Cameron: Mm-hmm.
Tony Kynaston: uh, you don’t grow. And if you don’t grow, [00:08:00] you eventually shrink. Um, and so it’s,
Cameron: It’s why I’ve,
Tony Kynaston: the way it’s gonna go.
Cameron: sorry. I’ve always been skeptical about this decoupling from China argument that we’ve been hearing for a few years now. I mean, I, it’s very hard to decouple. Well, once you’ve spent 40 years basically offshoring you, your manufacturing capability, you to, to bring that back inside your own borders is a very, very difficult, expensive, decades long exercise to build factories and build warehouses and skill up staff and, uh, you know, find stuff.
And, and you’re, as you say, you’re only gonna do that if you’re confident that, uh, this is gonna be the trajectory that the country’s going on. Of course, that’s the other thing. I mean, I’m sure anyone looking at Mabb, anyone in [00:09:00] manufacturing is also knows that. AI and robotics in theory, are gonna play a significant role in the future of manufacturing, both domestically and internationally in the course of the next 10 years.
So you have to take that into account if you’re gonna invest in manufacturing capability. Are we investing for a world where stuff is built by humans or is we investing for a world where stuff is made by robots? And you know, if you’re gonna spend billions of dollars investing in manufacturing capabilities, should you be waiting a few years until you just buy a fleet of robots?
And then are you buying those robots out of the US or out of China where they’re gonna be a 10th of the price and probably better.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah. they’re, they’re all good questions and one of the reasons why I think manufacturing will decline in the US and you can, you know, to, to pick specific examples, Teslas are still being made overseas. They have, have a fair bit of manufacturing back in the US but they’ve lost a lot of market share to BYD and the other Chinese [00:10:00] EV companies.
So, yeah, again. you’re on the Tesla board, you’re thinking to yourself, we’re losing market share against the cheaper competitor. Why are we gonna invest in high cost manufacturing facilities on the US soil when just gonna turn out a high margin product, which we can’t compete with overseas, um, for. So they must be, you know, really turning themselves inside out, trying to work out what their future looks like. if you are Apple, you know, you said you’d bring plants back to the US but I don’t think they have yet, or they may have brought one back to the us. sort of deal, right? Um,
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: you’re treading a thin line between what works for the political narrative and what works for
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony Kynaston: narrative. Um, yeah, that’s, that’s tough. think, having said all that, China’s really shown the template for the future. One of the things that they’ve been successful at is that they are making themselves self-reliant.
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: why EVs are so cheap [00:11:00] in China is because they realized that they had. Dependencies on overseas oil. So they said, well, let’s try and reduce that. And the way to reduce that is to manufacture EVs cheaply
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: and, sure our, our, um, domestic fleet is now electrically based and not using oil.
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: and that’s the one of the byproducts of that is, um, well we can export those cheap cars around the world too. one of the articles I looked at when you sent me your, um, articles about this was the fact that imports from China are up 18% in the last half they’re not going to the us they’re coming here. And the biggest drivers of that import increase are electric vehicles and, uh, alternative energy assets like solar panels and windmills and things like that.
So, We don’t have a manufacturing base on either of those two things, so I don’t think we’ll be putting tariffs on them. just be accepting them. But, you know, it does create a dependency. And [00:12:00] if there’s ever an issue with, know, some kind of conflict where we side with orca over the China and we can’t get access to those things cheaply, we’re stranded. We don’t get, we have to pay through the nose and for Teslas again. So it’s,
Cameron: Mm-hmm.
Tony Kynaston: you know, it’s, it’s, there’s a political risk to all this when the world’s. I remember we talked about this a few years ago about the Shell planning process and when I was at Shell. So what, what Shell does is it, it starts from the top level up from the macro, and it says, we’re gonna develop four potential scenarios that we think are the most likely for where the world goes in the next five to 10 years. when I was there, and I think what it does then from memory is it’s, it, it discards two after the first year and says, okay, they’re less likely now after we’ve seen it play out a bit and it focuses on one or two, and then it focuses on one. And where it got to when I was at Shell was, um, what they called international trade.
So basically the world was. Devolving from being, um, centered around [00:13:00] countries and was becoming more internationally dependent. And, uh, and therefore shell at least had, had quite, would therefore expand its fleet of service stations and refineries all over the world it could, it would have, uh, know, um, un well largely unimpeded shipping.
It would have largely unimpeded abilities to invest and, and then to repatriate the funds and all that kind of stuff. Now, the current shell. thesis is, has gone from what was called global me McCan mercantilism back to um, nation states. So it’s now saying the world’s retreating back to um, Europe looking after itself.
China looking after itself, Russia looking after itself and the US looking after itself and emerging markets looking after themselves. So,
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony Kynaston: um, that’s the kind of world we’re in. A Australia hasn’t cottoned onto that yet ’cause we still have a big deficit in terms of our royal needs, a big deficit in terms of our manufacturing needs, cetera, et [00:14:00] cetera.
So if we ever get on the wrong foot of China or somebody else, we’re gonna face a problem. And I don’t think the government’s taking that into account. There’s certainly not enough oil reserves. There’s certainly not enough. Um, there’s certainly not a manufacturing base anymore that can build cars, all that kind of thing.
So, um, we’re stuffed as opposed to China who will survive if they go into a, a. Military con confrontation with some, some other part of the world. So, um, it’s very interesting to watch and I guess we’re Australia’s pretty pragmatic ’cause we’ll just take the cheap cars while they’re there, but eventually we’re gonna, um, come across or if there is a, if there, if the walls go up, so to speak, because of confrontations around the world.
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony Kynaston: But as we’ve said many times before, that’s all macro and it doesn’t affect our share um, process at the moment.
Cameron: Um, talking to Taylor, uh, in the last week because he’s just done his first car deal with his cl for his clients. And, um, uh, I, I [00:15:00] read an article, I can’t remember where it was, but I. Saying that, um, the number of car vendors in Australia is gonna double in the next couple of years from about 35 to 65 or 70 or something like that.
And most of them are coming from China. Like just all of these brands
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: that are exploding. And this is on the futuristic show for the last year or so, I’ve been saying this is what I expect to see happen with, um, humanoid Robotics. There’ll be just thousands of companies in China competing for the robotic space, driving the price down, uh, driving innovation up.
Um, just flooding the market with low cost robotics anyway.
Tony Kynaston: And then there might be some issues with that. ’cause like, you know, the, head of the Australian security services here is saying that, um, they can have backdoor entry into those things. They can be kill switches. They, they can at least take your data and all the rest of it.
Cameron: I thought [00:16:00] you were talking about sex robots there for a second. When you’re talking about backdoor entry into the robots, slow down.
Tony Kynaston: But, um, and, and look, that could just all be smoke and mirrors that they’re trying to stop people from buying Chinese cars. But, um, it’ll be interesting to see what, how that develops as well.
Cameron: Yeah. Alright, well moving on from US and China economy stuff. Got a question for you. Got a lot of questions from listeners this week.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah,
Cameron: It’s good. But I got a question from, uh, myself. Um, so on our buy list this week,
Tony Kynaston: yourself higher than all our listeners do. You’ll go first? Yeah.
Cameron: of course. Um, yeah, this is important stuff. Um, on our buy list this week, FWE Fleetwood Mac
Tony Kynaston: FWD.
Cameron: again. Um, one of the few things. I could actually buy that I hadn’t, didn’t already have parcels of somewhere in the portfolio along with OML and DSK, and I yuck at both of [00:17:00] those, ’cause I’ve both bought both of those like 10 times and had to sell ’em over the years.
Every time I see Ooh, media or dusk, I’m like, Ugh, God, not you guys again. And, uh, their prices have not gone the right way. You know, sometimes you buy something and you sell it and then you look at it six months later and the prices has gone up and you go, oh, I coulda held it. No, not with these guys. That just keeps going down.
But, um, Fleetwood was back on now. Uh, uh, you may recall the CEO was fired last November, late November. We sold it. It was a red flag. The price has risen since then
Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm.
Cameron: and it’s back on the buy list. Um, when do we take the red flag off? It is when they come out with new financials.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah, it’s a good question. I, I don’t really have a hard and fast rule, but, so I’m happy to go with new financials. Um, I, I did note, I mean, the share price has risen since November, [00:18:00] but not by a whole lot. So I don’t know if, um, if that’s a, if the market’s sort of tentative at the moment for that stock or whether it’s wholeheartedly. into it. But look, it’s always a problem in January anyway, because we’re gonna get new numbers within the next month or so too. So it fleetwood may not be on the buy list when it announces. Um, the flip side has always been in my mind that if we buy it now and they announce good results, we get that first 10 or 20% uplift on the day.
So,
Cameron: Well, don’t we have a Yeah,
Tony Kynaston: we’re not buying in January anyway, so ’ cause of
Cameron: uh
Tony Kynaston: we’ve had, what we’ve had problems with in the last couple of, um, years. Yeah. Or last couple of halves.
Cameron: huh. I’d forgotten about that. So we’ve got a, a block on confession season buying.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah. So we’re waiting anyway, but as to, I mean, the only way we’ll ever know whether the red flags removed is if Fleet Fleetwood actually communicates with the market and the shareholders and say, Hey, here’s the story, here’s the new [00:19:00] person, here’s what happened. Everything’s hunky dory, but they haven’t, they’ve just been quiet.
They’ve been stung since November. there’s been no, there’s, there’s been an announcement saying the CEO didn’t align with their strategy and their strategy’s still intact and they’re with it, but it was still a shock announcement and the guy was out the door in 24 hours, which is never a good sign.
So, yeah, I, I’d like to know more about it, but yeah, if I come out with good numbers and it’s a buy, I think that’s good enough.
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: Okay. Well I’m glad I brought that up because I’d forgotten about the confession season hold. Um,
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: have to let. Light members know about that. Um, I’ve got was I can get into some of the listener stuff or have you got something you wanna talk about before we do that?
Tony Kynaston: The only thing I had to talk about this week, and I guess I didn’t. Record didn’t put a lot into my notes after I saw the list of questions you had. ’ cause
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony Kynaston: uh, role came down for the [00:20:00] weekend. My brother-in-law and my sister, which had, we
Cameron: Mm-hmm.
Tony Kynaston: together.
Cameron: Hmm
Tony Kynaston: played a bit of golf and um, they did a lot of sightseeing, but it was good to catch up. But he asked me a question. He said he’s had a good year with QAV. I think we talked about his results last week the show. He said he was thinking of putting a rule, one of resetting his rule ones to his December 31 closing prices. So trying to lock in the gains he had from last year in case he gave them all back. And, um, I said, yeah, interesting idea. Um, it’s a bit like putting a trailing stop-loss on the stocks. it makes you happy and makes you sleep at night, go for it. Um, I
Cameron: hmm.
Tony Kynaston: do it ’cause I’ve certainly seen that have had a high and then come off 10%, 20% and then make new highs again. Um, particularly when you numbers come out, for example.
So,
Cameron: Hmm Hmm.
Tony Kynaston: You could easily have something retreat, 10, uh, 10 or 20%, sell it and then find it goes up or
Cameron: Because other people are [00:21:00] doing the same thing. Other people are taking profits, selling it,
Tony Kynaston: Yeah,
Cameron: but it’s still a good business. It’s still got a lot of upside. Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: yeah. So it’s benching Michael Jordan, so to speak.
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony Kynaston: Um, and if, if I look at my holdings, um, over the, the year some, yeah, they have retreated 10%, 20% and then kicked on again. So,
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: worked out well for me. Not to say it’ll continue to work out well, but, um, it’s hard for me to answer a question like walls because I haven’t modeled it. Um, you’d need to do years of regression testing to see if it’s better than our current strategy. Um, so
Cameron: A feeling I have.
Tony Kynaston: You have,
Cameron: Not a feeling. I mean, I dunno, I mean not definitively, but I’ve gone through and picked up lots of examples when this comes up in the past of stocks that have dropped by 20% and then gone up 50%. Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah, we do.
Cameron: So for,
Tony Kynaston: I think, you did model that. You’re right.
Cameron: for every example that people have where we lose, and I’ve had [00:22:00] plenty of those.
Um, like Meyer is the one that always comes to memory that was up like 80% and then went, became a real one for every one of those. I’ve got one or two counter examples. Uh, so yeah.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah, look, but I’m not gonna tell people not to do it if, if Will feels comfortable doing it, um,
Cameron: Yeah,
Tony Kynaston: the chances are he is gonna, he’s got a good chance of buying a stock that will go up if he’s going back to the buy list again. So
Cameron: yeah,
Tony Kynaston: he may, come out in front. It’s, it’s probably like a 60 50, 60 40 thing.
So,
Cameron: yeah, yeah.
Tony Kynaston: you feel comfortable with.
Cameron: Yeah. And I think, I mean, that’s one of the great, um. Pieces of your philosophy with QAV is at the end of the day, you gotta be able to sleep at night. So do whatever you are comfortable with, but do that knowing that if you start to tweak the rules you, you know, without having done regression testing on the [00:23:00] impact of tweaking them, that you could be losing performance.
But you know, if you’re prepared to try.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah,
That if that’s the cost of peace of mind and it’s an
Cameron: Yes.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: If you’re prepared to trade that for being able to sleep at night, then go do it.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: Alright, let’s get into some of the listener stuff. Jason. Jason is a QAV Light subscriber, has been pretty much since day one. One of our very earliest light subscribers.
Tony Kynaston: Oh,
Cameron: to send me a lot of emails, a lot of questions, and I appreciated that in the early days, clarifying stuff and helping me think through light stuff.
And as everyone knows, the light portfolios really struggled for the first couple of years. A lot of people didn’t make it, but Jason did and he sent me a great email. Um, happy New Year to you, TK and your families. I was catching up on last year’s episode with Scott the other day when you were talking about people that started in 2020 2 23 made me reflect on my journey.
I started my QAV life in March, 2022. [00:24:00] Why did I start it? Well, the family and I had been traveling around Australia in 20 20, 20 21, and when we got back in March, 2021, we were basically starting from scratch again, exhausted all our funds on a trip of a lifetime. So I thought there had to be a smarter way to get in front.
After listening to a couple of episodes, I found QAV. It fitted my process perfectly. Had and still have no desire to learn the ins and outs of business and don’t picture myself reading business reports and p and l statements. So a process driven system that also takes the emotion out of investing was right up my alley.
The worst my portfolio was doing was minus 8%. That was on the 18th of June, 2022, but at the time the index was minus 10%, so I didn’t feel so bad. The real tough times were when I was still hovering around minus six, minus 7%, and the index had recovered to plus two, plus three. This time was challenging and given the constant small parcel size I was purchasing and the brokerage, it felt as though I was in an MMA fight.
[00:25:00] I was down on the canvas and the ASX just coming in with hammer fists brutal. Anyway, I got punched in the jaw in uh, uh, sparring on Saturday, so I know how that feels. Got punched in the left and I, it’s hurt on the right to chew for the last few days, but we were at our physio this morning. She was working on my ankle, which is still out, but I to mention to the judge, she goes, oh, okay.
She worked on it and it’s all good now. She fixed it anyway. I was just thinking about Hammer fests. Anyway, roll forward a couple of years and I’m up 17.52%, which is a PB peanut butter. Last calendar year I did a 21.75, quite the turnaround. Just by following the process, there hasn’t been a huge standout either.
Best performed stock has been NHC at 80.77%. Couple of others at the seventies, and then most others hovering around the 30 to 50% return. So just to shout out to you guys for sticking with the process, sticking fat with the process, and encouraging us to do the [00:26:00] same. Thought that was a typo. Then I realized, oh no, we meant that results speak for themselves.
Now I gotta confess, I did purchase a parcel of VAS, that’s Vanguard. Just wanted to see how it would perform. I thought he made a vasectomy and I had one of those and I don’t recommend it. Um, not after my experience hurt like buggery. It was a moment of weakness. Yeah. I had a moment of weakness when they started cutting it.
I was like, Hey, the aesthetic, Hey. Okay, I’ve got a complete, I gotta, I gotta do a gotta do. A side note here. Do you know where anesthetic, how it was discovered and where it comes from?
Tony Kynaston: I think I have read the story, but no. Remind me.
Cameron: So I’ve been reading this book, the Serpent in the Rainbow. Um, it’s one of the books about, uh, pharmacol, uh, pharmacology, um, where this guy’s, a Harvard scientist in the seventies, I think, uh, went to Haiti and was studying, uh, voodoo and zombie drugs, the term people into zombies. [00:27:00] Um, anyway, he was talking about, uh.
An aesthetics and I delved into it. So 200 years ago, raves were ether parties and, uh, nitrous oxide parties like I had in high school. I didn’t realize how far that went back. So people would get together in high society in the early 18 hundreds.
Tony Kynaston: had an
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: nitrous oxide. Oxide, Raven, when you were in high school. Cool.
Cameron: We used to nitrous oxide all the time. When we would get together, we would have the canisters and the old, um, cream dispenser things so to stream,
Tony Kynaston: Yep.
Cameron: and we would hit them up and we, we did it every party until I turned blue one night after taking like four or five of these things and we all kind of agreed, this is probably a good time to stop.
Anyway, they, we used to do these parties and there was a dentist there, I think his name was [00:28:00] Howard Wells, and he, he saw a guy fall down and gash his leg and not feel it. And went, huh, I wonder if we could use this stuff in dental surgery. And that’s how it got started. And, um, chloroform and ether and, uh, nitrous oxide started to become used in medical practice, but it was a party drug.
So it was fascinating. I was like, how come I never knew that before? That’s fantastic. Anyway, back, back to, uh, moment of weakness, um, with my portfolio at 11 Stocks, which I’m happy with the size of, I’ll just continue to build on larger parcel sizes when I need to sell and buy and hopefully increase the overall portfolio value.
Oh, and thanks for bringing back the weekly free podcast. Cheers, Jason. Uh, well that’s great Jason. And, um, as I said in my email, um, congratulations on, uh, sticking through it and trusting in the system to come. Good. You know,
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: to pay off.
Tony Kynaston: That’s
Cameron: Hmm.[00:29:00]
Tony Kynaston: Good to hear.
Cameron: Yeah. Yeah. I hadn’t heard from him for a while. Um, so I was happy to hear from him.
Uh, really important question to hear from Tom. Um, but he says it’s an after hours question, so we’ll leave it for after hours. Um, Scott,
Tony Kynaston: Okay.
Cameron: it’s about golf clubs for listeners.
Tony Kynaston: all right.
Cameron: Um, oh, here’s a good one. This is from Scott, who is the aforementioned Scott Jason’s email, uh, loving the Sunday buy list, delving deeply into it with happiness. Doubly happy it came through nice and early. How good. I’m very thankful. It was actually a Saturday night buy list this week, believe it or not.
Got home from kung fu wrecked on Saturday and did the buy list. You’re welcome.
Tony Kynaston: go home from the nitrous party, the ether.
Cameron: I wish. Got home from having my jaw broken and, uh, did the buy list. Meanwhile, I’ve done a little analysis that you and TK might find of interest. A few weeks back I noticed that MAH had reappeared on the buy list, and it was about three times what I [00:30:00] sold it for when it became a rule one sell for me in May last year, feeling very wronged by this injustice.
I thought I would follow up on what I mentioned about a historical tracker of your buy list on the podcast and what it would look like if we held a selection of them from the first time they appeared on the buy list and just waited. So my detailed data only goes back to the 2nd of February buy list last year when I started tracking on my own spreadsheets just under 12 months and 51 bias in total.
I then took a large selection of the buyers from that first week, a few more from the next few weeks, and bundled them into a portfolio with $5,000 investment in each and no selling or buying from that point on. I also included all the ones I bought in this period, whether I ended up selling or not, just for my information.
Interestingly, there were 74 stocks on that 3rd of February buy list. About five or six had disappeared for whatever reason, so they were excluded. The results were astounding. Spreadsheet attached. In [00:31:00] short, 58 QAV stocks selected 43 returning positive results. 15 negative six. Over a hundred percent return from between 106% and 157%.
14 over 30%. Return 17 with a 10 to 30% return, seven up to 10% of the losers. The worst were ASX one negative 57%, and the best. SUL negative 7%. The best of the worst, I guess he means in dollar slash percentage amounts. $290,000 invested in $5,000 lots with 50 of the 58 stocks bought before the 31st of March, 2025 would now be worth 362,000 and change, or 24.84% of growth.
You could have just randomly picked 58 stocks, just wrote out the whole year pretty much. And despite all the chaos and the madness, you would’ve ended up winning and winning very well. So sound like Trump there so much [00:32:00] winning, you won’t believe how much winning you would’ve done. Some people say it was the greatest winning of all time.
Some of my picks if I just held them instead of selling, would’ve made my portfolio look much better. Examples, metals X bought at 67%, sold at 52 and a half cents. Now trading at a dollar 25 Ouch. A1C mines bought at 35 cents. Sold at 31.5, now trading at 60 cents. MAH as noted before, that stings a caveat is that in my manual data entry of each buy list that I have pulled the information from, so some of it could not be quite a hundred percent correct, but I doubt it would’ve had a material impact.
I thought there may be some correlation between how often a stock has appeared on the buy list and it’s success, and there might be something in this, but I don’t have the skillset to work that out. Some interesting observations though. Two of the 10 performers only appeared five or six times in the 51 weeks I’ve been trading.
I’ve been tracking, sorry, GNP and PIU, although it is possible with those two, that they’d been on the buy list regularly [00:33:00] prior to this and had reached the end of their shelf life due to the price going up Of the top 10 performers that were on the buy list and average 24 outta 51 weeks tracked with the most being PRN 41 weeks.
Of the bottom 10 performers, the average was 17 outta 51 weeks tracked and the highest being LAU 31 weeks. Note that not all the stocks were on the list from the 2nd of February, but the majority were tracked from before the 1st of April last year when the world went a little upside down thanks to Orange Man.
I’ll make a note to redo this around the 1st of April and let you know the results of this. Maybe there is an argument for not looking back because you can find anything you like in data from a set point in time, but I thought this might be of interest to you and TK looking into strategies around hold sell for QAV Disciples.
I can hear TK saying We don’t predict the future, but when you’ve got a roughly 75% win rate on a random data set, you are predicting the future with a great rate of success from the buy list. Perhaps it is just simpler to buy and [00:34:00] hold and review every three months or so to see how you’re going. There is a question in here somewhere along the lines of, can we do a deeper dive into this and see what happens if we just buy and hold a random selection of buy stocks from this week and the next three to four weeks, or just track the last three to four weeks, then come back and look at them in 12 months, 24 months, et cetera.
Could be a podcast episode on this annually and repeat it each 12 months with a new list from Iran. Lease selected month of buy lists. I would love to go back to the very beginning and track each stock after a debuts on the buy list and see how they went since inception of QAV would be a great insight and maybe even a selling tool for new subscribers.
Might need a spreadsheet guru to assist me though. Hope this is of interest. Cheers, Scott. So first of all, well done Scott. Nothing. I love more than seeing people start to think deeply about investing and investing strategies and buying and holding and toying with stuff and.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: Getting, getting into the, the [00:35:00] analysis and the numbers, it’s addictive.
Um, you’re down the rabbit hole now, Scott,
Tony Kynaston: Yes.
Cameron: however
Tony Kynaston: That’s, what I say. The Excel is my men’s shed. Just what?
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony Kynaston: into the shed. For a couple of
Cameron: Yeah,
Tony Kynaston: do this kind of
Cameron: yeah.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: Hmm. Do you have, do you have playboys wrapped inside your Excel spreadsheet, like hidden behind Excel spreadsheet? Isn’t that what men do in mens sheds?
Tony Kynaston: I
Cameron: No, I, I dunno, I’ve never had a mens shed. I have my, my little office here, so I did my own analysis, um, my buy and hold experiment. So I went back to the earliest buy list I have, which is the 5th of September, 2021, and I just did a spreadsheet where I bought 20 stocks on that buy list from the top.
Down, assumed an initial capital of [00:36:00] 20,000 thousand dollars into which like we did with the dummy portfolio and then just did buy and forget until today. So pretend I didn’t check them, just let ’em run and then I checked to see where it is at. And that would be, what’s that, September 21 to now? So four and a bit years.
I did filter for a DT greater than 15,000 though before I bought them. Um, and the results were not great. Uh, 4.37 years, actually I did it. Um, the total current portfolio value. So if we started with 20,000 and just let it run the current portfolio value, do you wanna take a guess, Tony? Listeners at home, pause and have your own guess.
Starting with $20,000 4.37 years ago, what do you think [00:37:00] it’s worth? It would be worth now,
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This podcast is an information provider and in giving you product information we are not [01:29:00] making any suggestion or recommendation about a particular product. The information has been prepared without taking into account your individual investment objectives, financial circumstances or needs. Before you decide whether or not to acquire a particular financial product you should assess whether it is appropriate for you in the light of your own personal circumstances, having regard to your own objectives, financial situation and needs. You may wish to obtain financial advice from a suitably qualified adviser before making any decision to acquire a financial product. Please note that all information about performance returns is historical. Past performance should not be relied upon as an indicator of future performance; unit prices and the value of your investment may fall as well as rise. The results are general advice only and not personal product advice.
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Quote of the day: “Theories destroy facts,” said Peter Medawar at a Mensa conference in the 1960s. He meant that a general theory can remove the need to record huge quantities of isolated facts.”
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